#Wendy Garbo
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Galaxy High School - CBS / NHK (Japan) - September 13, 1986 - December 6, 1986
Animated / Science Fiction (13 Episodes)
Running Time: 30 minutes
English Cast:
Susan Blu as Aimee Brightower
Hal Rayle as Doyle Cleverlobe
Howard Morris as Professor Icenstein and Luigi La Bounci (plus other miscellaneous voices)
Pat Carroll as Ms. Biddy McBrain
Nancy Cartwright as "Flat" Freddy Fender and Gilda Gossip
Guy Christopher as Earl Eccchhh
Gino Conforti as Ollie Oilslick the cabbie and Reggie Unicycle
Jennifer Darling as Booey Bubblehead, Myrtle Blastermeier and Wendy Garbo
Pat Fraley as Coach Frogface and Sludge the janitor
Henry Gibson as Doyle's locker
David L. Lander as Milo de Venus
Danny Mann as the Creep
Neil Ross as Rotten Roland
John Stephenson as Beef Bonk and Harvey Blastermeier
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was curious about the biggest sweeps so far in completed polls from hot vintage ladies tournament and these are the top 10 with winners in bold
Hermione Baddely v. Glynis Johns - 89.8%
Anna May Wong v. Grace Darmond - 88.6%
Heather Angel v. Katharine Hepburn - 88.3%
Vivien Leigh v. Wendy Hiller - 87.3%
Nancy Kwan v. Simone Signoret - 86.8%
Gale Storm v. Brigitte Bardot - 85.4%
Zizi Jeanmaire v. Pearl Bailey - 85.1%
Rita Moreno v. Deanna Durbin - 84%
Myrna Loy v. Gracie Allen - 83.9%
Marpessa Dawn v. Anna Wiazemsky - 83.6%
I think Greta Garbo, Rita Hayworth, and Lucille Ball have the biggest leads in the ones still open. Putting my money on Lucille Ball having the biggest overall sweep of Round 1 now.
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I'm drawing Aliens/Robots/Monsters for #Robotober2020
16th October 2020 Galaxy High - Le Déjeuner à la Pizzeria Clip Studio Paint
Wendy Garbo, Booey Bubblehead and Gilda Gossip
#Favourite Crayon Comics#Robotober#Robotober2020#AlienRobotMonster#alien#Galaxy High#Wendy Garbo#Booey Bubblehead#Gilda Gossip#fanart#cartoon#cartoonists on tumblr#artists on tumblr#fcdaily2020
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With all that's going on i have been checking out older cartoons and Galaxy High is one. The show is pretty amusing so I had the draw them ladies
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So I’ve been messin’ with some Galaxy High revamping for a few months now and I still just never ended up posting anything of course... I did post a few of these on my Patreon first tho.
It started with the thought of tryinig to rekindle any of my G/T love and remembering the one episode of a giant Doyle from this old niche show, and I thought to go off of that. Went and watched the whole show (only 13 episodes) and was like... well if I do them I’d want them fitting more how aliens probably should be...
And thus started a full revamp of the whole series itself. New designs for old characters as well as some new characters.
Basically the set up of the original show is that Doyle was the popular jock and Aimee the loser nerd and once they went to space school they swapped roles: Aimee was hot shit and Doyle was a fuck up; which I’d be keeping overall as a story concept.
I generally started with their old designs (which I think are all charming as is tbh, just not very alien and much thought put into that concept lol), just to get a feel of them and then jumped into a new design. Doyle has p much stayed the same, but Aimee I ended up feeling the redesign and it felt right (tho I didn’t settle on her outfit yet...). Wendy’s design came out pretty clear from the first go, but I’ve been messing with the others a bit since on getting something right. I hope to share more soon of the cast~
#galaxy high#galaxy highschool#doyle cleverlobe#aimee brightower#wendy garbo#my art#body horror//#just a bit lol#galaxy high revamp
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Closer, October 5
You can buy a copy of this issue for your very own at my eBay store: https://www.ebay.com/str/bradentonbooks
Cover: Ron Howard celebrates The Andy Griffith Show
Page 1: Contents
Page 2: The Big Picture -- Greta Garbo getting her hair and makeup done for 1927′s silent film Love
Page 4: Farewell to Diana Rigg
Page 6: Picture Perfect -- Kathie Lee Gifford and her family compete on Celebrity Family Feud hosted by Steve Harvey facing off Ricki Lake’s brood
Page 10: Naomi Watts on a kayaking trip in Canada, Helen Mirren helping clean up Lake Tahoe’s Nevada Beach
Page 12: Carole Baskin for Dancing With the Stars
Page 22: Cover Story -- The 60th anniversary of The Andy Griffith Show -- memories of Mayberry -- the series’ warm-hearted humor and lovable characters and small-town charm continues to delight America six decades later
Page 26: Wendie Malick -- I still feel like a kid -- the star believes it’s important to make the most of every milestone in life
Page 33: Horoscopes -- Kelly Ripa turned 50 on October 2
Page 34: Entertainment -- Mariah Carey on her memoir The Meaning of Mariah Carey, In the Spotlight -- Chris Rock
Page 36: Best Friends -- Joy Bauer and her dog Gatsby, Bindi Irwin and a kangaroo mama
Page 37: Brian Cox teamed up with PETA to urge people to adopt and spay their pets
Page 38: On the Move -- Regis and Joy Philbin’s home in Greenwich, Connecticut for sale
Page 40: Great Escape -- Meredith Vieira on Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Page 44: How to keep your home germ-free
Page 46: Mayim Bialik -- I’m still learning every day -- the actress and real life Ph.D. on family and fame and her next big move
Page 50: Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks -- love, lies and secrets -- how the king and queen of Hollywood lived their dream then lost everything
Page 52: Celine Dion -- I’m ready to sing again! -- after months away from the spotlight the star prepares for a courageous comeback
Page 54: Raquel Welch -- my life at 80 -- the still gorgeous actress opens up about finding happiness on her own terms
Page 56: The Art of Organization -- The Home Edit’s Clea Shearer and Joanna Teplin share their pro pointers on how to streamline your space
Page 58: My Life in 10 Pictures -- Colin Firth
Page 60: Flashback -- Moulin Rouge!, Gloria Steinem, boating beauties, track suits
#tabloid toc#tabloidtoc#ron howard#the andy griffith show#andy griffith show#colin firth#wendie malick#mayim bialik#mary pickford#douglas fairbanks#celine dion#raquel welch#the home edit#greta garbo#diana rigg#mariah carey#chris rock#brian cox#regis philbin#joy philbin#meredith vieira#cape cod
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sun in the 6th house notes
🚿perfectionists
🚿critics of both themselves and others
🚿sees the beauty of both femininity and masculinity
🚿excellent at throwing shade
🚿can be known for their career
🚿will embrace their role as the villain
🚿their mental health is fragile
🚿the villain who you root for
🚿”if i gotta be a bitch, imma be a bad one”
🚿you have reasons not to like them, but you like them anyways
6H sun natives: greta garbo, ariana grande, wendy williams, rupaul, gordon ramsay
#cashmoneycarmen#astrology#astro notes#astrology notes#western astrology#tropical astrology#natal#sun#sun in houses#sun in 6th
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Finally caved and I'm almost done with red white and royal blue and all I have to say is:
This is what y'all were moaning about??? The Best Book ever in your teeny brains??? Why was this on everyone's recommendation list???? I was expecting smth more idk profound and touching: it's a ROMCOM that's it! A basic romcom! Like yes #gayrights we deserve basic ass romcoms too, but guys..... why was this everyone's favorite??? Its millenial "Check Out Wendy's Epic Clap Back" uwu liberal garbo. WHY WHY WHY WAS IT THE PRESIDENTS SON.... IM ugh idk the inclusion of government just felt weird, and then the royals being like "yea we have blood money and are colonists lol :P" I'm... also the cover art is ugly as shit
#im mean im mean to books i know#rambles#ill make a real review later but heres my messy thoughts#its ok#its like a 3/5
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Wendy Whelan in Arthur Pita’s The Ballad of Mack and Ginny, part of Other Stories, Fall for Dance Festival 2016, September 2016. © Foteini Christofilopoulou.
Other Stories offers a hitherto unseen side of Whelan, who built her career dancing works by Balanchine, Christopher Wheeldon, and Alexei Ratmansky. Here, she’s a tough gal in high heels, thigh-high stockings, and garters; her makeup is pure Greta Garbo, with heavy lids and a downturned mouth. Her legs are long, and maybe the getup makes them look even longer; in any case, as they say, she has legs for miles.
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“Andrew Bolton, Wendy Yu Curator in Charge of the Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, has framed his spring exhibition, “Camp: Notes on Fashion,” around Susan Sontag’s seminal 1964 essay “Notes on ‘Camp.’ ” Sontag’s essay brought the subject—which she defined as the “love of the unnatural . . . style at the expense of content”—into the cultural mainstream, where, after the Stonewall riots of 1969, it flourished.
The exhibition—which runs from May 9 through September 8—is designed by the theater scenographer Jan Versweyveld, partner of the innovative director Ivo van Hove, with whom he has collaborated on such resolutely un-camp productions as Network, David Bowie’s Lazarus, and the Tony Award–winning A View from the Bridge.
Sontag found camp in Busby Berkeley movies and in the he-man actor Victor Mature, in Mae West and General Charles de Gaulle, in Garbo and Swan Lake, Flash Gordon comics and Caravaggio, chinoiserie and the entirety of the Art Nouveau movement.
To structure the exhibition, Bolton has explored the elements that Sontag identifies as camp—with artifice, excess, extravagance, irony, nostalgia, démodé, innocence, and surplus among them—as they manifest themselves in fashion.
Although Sontag ventured that camp was “something of a private code, a badge of identity,” she did not dwell on its very specifically queer origins.”
Read the full piece here
Read/download Sontag’s 1964 “Notes On Camp” in PDF: https://monoskop.org/images/5/59/Sontag_Susan_1964_Notes_on_Camp.pdf
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Under the cut you’ll find 675 FEMININE NAMES all compiled by me !! I will most likely be updating this and my other lists at some point and would be more than willing to post more specific lists if anyone wants them !! Please like or reblog if this was helpful !!
Abilene, Acacia, Ada, Adalia, Adalind, Adelina, Adeline, Adela, Adele, Adriana, Agnes, Aimee, Aislinn, Aja, Alana, Alba, Alessia, Alexa, Alexandra, Alexandria, Alexandrine, Aliyah, Allora, Alma, Almira, Althea, Alva, Amber, Amabel, Amara, Amelie, Amethyst, Amina, Anastasia, Antoinette, Andromeda, Anika, Anissa, Annabel, Annabel-Lee, Anne, Annette, Annie, Anniston, Appoline, Apollinia, Apollonia, Ara, Arabella, Araminta, Ariadne, Ariana, Arianne, Ariella, Asena, Astra, Astrid, Athena, Audrey, Audrina, Autumn, Aurelia, Aurora, Austen, Ava, Avalee, Avalon, Averill, Aviana, Ayla, Aylee, Azalea, Azaria.
Bambi, Bardot, Beatrice, Beatrix, Becky, Bee, Bellatrix, Belle, Benedette, Benilde, Bernadette, Bess, Beth, Betsey, Beverly, Bexley, Bijou, Bindie, Birdie, Blair, Blossom, Bluebell, Blythe, Bonnie, Brenna, Bria, Briar, Bridget, Briella, Brielle, Brinley, Bristol, Brooke, Bronwyn, Buffy.
Cadence, Calla, Callie, Callista, Camila, Camille, Cara, Cariad, Carmen, Carol, Carolina, Caroline, Carolyn, Carrie, Cassandra, Cassiopeia, Cecilia, Cecily, Celeste, Celestia, Celine, Chanel, Charity, Charlotte, Cher, Cherie, Cheryl, Cheyenne, Chloe, Claire, Clara, Clarity, Claudia, Claudine, Clea, Cleo, Clover, Colette, Colleen, Constance, Connie, Copeland, Cora, Coral, Coralia, Coraline, Cordelia, Coretta, Corinna, Corinne, Corisande, Corliss, Cornelia, Corvina, Cosette, Cressida, Cynthia, Cyra.
Dahlia, Dahliana, Daisy, Damara, Dara, Darcy, Darla, Darlene, Daphne, Davina, Dawn, Dee, Delia, Delilah, Delphi, Delphine, Denise, Desiree, Desdemona, Desi, Destiny, Diana, Diane, Dinah, Dixie, Dolly, Dorothea, Dorothy, Dot, Drusilla.
Eadlyn, Eartha, Eden, Edie, Edina, Edith, Effie, Eileen, Elara, Eleanor, Eleanora, Elena, Eliana, Elisabeth, Elise, Elizabeth, Ella, Elle, Elodie, Eloise, Elowen, Elora, Elsie, Emalyn, Embla, Emilia, Emma, Emmeline, Emmy, Enid, Eponine, Erica, Erin, Esme, Estelle, Esther, Ethel, Ettie, Everly, Eva, Evangeline, Evanora, Evelina, Evelyn, Everly, Evita, Eyre.
Fae, Faith, Fallon, Fancy, Fannie, Fantine, Farah, Fawn, Faye, Felicity, Fern, Francine, Fran, Finnea, Fleur, Flora, Florence, Francesca, Franny, Frankie, Frida, Freya, Fyodora.
Gabriella, Gaia, Gail, Garbo, Gardenia, Gemma, Geneva, Geneve, Genevieve, Gennifer, Georgeanne, Georgia, Gia, Giana, Gigi, Gillian, Gina, Ginevra, Ginger, Ginny, Giordana, Giovanna, Gisele, Guilieta, Guilia, Guiliana, Gladys, Glenda, Glinda, Gloriana, Glory, Goldie, Goldeheve, Grace, Gracelyn, Gracie, Greer, Greta, Gretchen, Griselda, Guinevere, Gwenora, Gwendolyn, Gwenny.
Hadley, Haddie, Hadiya, Halle, Hallie, Halston, Hanna, Hannah, Harmony, Harper, Harriet, Hattie, Hazel, Helen, Helena, Heloise, Henrietta, Henna, Hera, Hermia, Hermione, Hester, Hettie, Holly, Honey, Honora, Hope.
Ida, Ilana, Ilyana, Imogen, Indie, Inessa, Ingrid, Iphegenia, Iris, Irene, Isabeau, Isabella, Isabelle, Isla, Isobel, Isolde, Ivana, Ivory, Ivy.
Jacinta, Jackie, Jada, Jade, Jane, Janie, Jasey, Jasey-Rae, Jeana, Jeanie, Jedda, Jennifer, Jennie, Jenny, Jessa, Jessamine, Johanna, Jolene, Jolie, Joplin, Josie, Josephine, Journey, Joy, Judith, Judy, Julia, Julie, Juliet, Juniper, Juno.
Kaia, Kalani, Kara, Karen, Karolina, Kate, Kathleen, Katherine, Kayla, Kaylee, Kedzie, Keely, Kelby, Kelsey, Kendra, Kenna, Kennedy, Kiara, Kimberly, Kinsley, Kitty, Kristina, Kyra.
Laela, Lara, Laura, Laurel, Lauren, Lavinia, Leah, Leia, Leila, Lena, Lenora, Leonora, Letitia, Liana, Liberty, Lila, Lilo, Lilia, Lilith, Lily, Lindsey, Livia, Lois, Lola, Loretta, Loral, Lorelei, Lorena, Lorraine, Lottie, Lovisa, Lucia, Lucille, Lucy, Ludovica, Luna, Lulu, Lumi, Lux, Lydia, Lynn, Lyra.
Macy, Madeleine, Maia, Mae, Maeve, Maggie, Magnolia, Malia, Marcella, Maren, Margaret, Margot, Martha, Maria, Marie, Marigold, Marilyn, Marina, Marissa, Marisol, Marlene, Marnie, Mary, Matilda, Maude, Maureen, Maxine, Meadow, Melody, Melinda, Mercy, Merritt, Mia, Michelle, Millicent, Minerva, Minnie, Mira, Miriam, Moira, Molly, Mona, Morrigan.
Nadia, Nadine, Nancy, Naomi, Narcissa, Naressa, Natalia, Natalie, Naya, Nellie, Nettie, Nia, Nicola, Nicole, Nicoletta, Nikita, Nina, Nikki, Noelle, Norah, Nova, Nyla.
Oara, Octavia, Odette, Odessa, Odyssesia, Odilia, Odina, Olita, Olive, Olivia, Olympia, Olwen, Opal, Ophelia, Oona, Orelia, Oriana, Orla, Orlena, Orpha, Ottoline, Ovalia.
Paige, Paisley, Pam, Pamela, Pandora, Patricia, Pearl, Peggy, Penelope, Petra, Persephone, Phoebe, Piper, Pippa, Pixie, Priscilla, Priya, Prudence, Polly, PollyAnna, Poppy, Posey.
Raina, Ravena, Regina, Rey, Rhea, Rhiannon, Romilly, Romy, Rosa, Rosalie, Rosemary, Rowena, Roxanne, Ruby, Ruth, Ruthie.
Sabrina, Sadie, Safiya, Sally, Samantha, Samara, Samira, Sara, Sarah, Savannah, Scarlett, Selene, Serafine, Seraphina, Serena, Sia, Sienna, Sierra, Siobhan, Skye, Sofia, Sophia, Sophie, Soleil, Solstice, Sonya, Sookie, Stella, Sylvia.
Talia, Tamara, Tana, Tamsin, Tatiana, Tessa, Thea, Theresa, Theodosia, Tiara, Tiffany, Tilda, Tina, Tinsley, Toria, Topanga, Trinity, Truly, Twyla.
Uma, Una, Ursula, Uta.
Vada, Vaia, Vara, Valentina, Valerie, Venus, Vera, Verity, Veronica, Victoria, Viola, Violet, Virginia, Vivette, Vivian.
Waverly, Weslyn, Wendy, Whitney, Winona, Winnie, Winnifred, Willa, Willow, Winter.
Xahlian, Xana, Xandra, Xelis, Xena, Ximena.
Yara, Yasmine, Yvette, Yvonne.
Zada, Zahara, Zara, Zariah, Zena, Zelda, Zelena, Zoe, Zola, Zophia, Zuri.
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The Alluring Appeal of Ava Gardner by Theresa Brown
It’s here folks! One of TCM’s signature programming events and one of my favorites: Summer Under the Stars! For August, TCM features one movie star a day and programs a full 24 hours of their films. I can’t think of a better way to get a sweeping overview of a film star’s career. Let me tell you a bit about my pick.
Do you know how captivating and alluring and uniquely famous you have to be to be known by just your first name? Anyone can be a Harlow, a Barrymore, a Valentino...a Garbo! (Actually no…they can’t! ) But a first name, now that’s tough. You’d have to not be confused with anyone else sharing that same name. In the 1940’s, there was the premiere blonde, brunette and redhead of glamour girls. There was Lana, the Blonde – kittenish and cute as a Barbie doll; Rita, the Redhead – regal, aloof, drop-dead gorgeous; but for my money The Brunette of the 1940’s who beats out The Sweater Girl and The Love Goddess is AVA.
Ava Gardner was sensual, down-to-earth, edgy. She could kiss you as soon as kill you. She’d steal your man right before your very eyes by just walking into the room, and she could be heartbreakingly vulnerable. Not bad for a girl born on a tobacco farm in Grabtown, North Carolina, going barefoot much of the time. Unlike the other bombshells who were discovered in person at a soda fountain or dancing in a nightclub, circumstance has it that Ava was discovered from her photograph in the window of her brother’s-in-law photo studio. The rest is history (which you can read on TCM or in Lee Server’s biography Ava Gardner: "Love Is Nothing"). She became a star overnight...though it took Ava a good five years of ‘overnights’, lots of B pictures and two husbands (Mickey Rooney: 1942-1943 and Artie Shaw: 1945-1946) to have her first real major hit in 1946. Ava had a better and longer lasting career than Lana and Rita.
Of her films showing, the ones to particularly take note of are those coming into her own as an actress in the '50s, showing that she was not just a pretty face. I’d like to recommend a couple of her movies for you, starting with her first real big hit, THE KILLERS (’46).
It’s an iconic film noir that’s tough, complex and not at all dated. My friend says the first 12 minutes are Killer! And she’s right. Ava’s good as a femme fatale with a faux hint of damsel in distress. When she first appears in the movie, Burt Lancaster (in his first movie) sees her and is a goner. So are we. You can feel her in the room. Don’t let her hushed, whispery voice fool you. She’s no shrinking violet about to take a beatdown from her husband in front of his gang. Instead, Ava laces into him in a room FULL of men, with this threat:
“You touch me and you won’t live ‘til morning!”
I relish that moment.
In SHOWBOAT (‘51) [the Sinatra years ...], Ava plays riverboat performer and “tragic mulatto” Julie LaVerne. Those quotes are on purpose. Isn’t she really just a woman in love with a man she’ll never have, wrapped up in 19th century racial politics? We see her take the slings and arrows of trying to pass for white and by the end of her story, she’s bedraggled.
Ava’s also very good in BHOWANI JUNCTION (’56). Again playing a bi-racial woman, the film is set during the time the British are leaving India. Ava’s character doesn’t deny her dual heritage of Anglo-Indian. She is torn, though, between tradition and falling for the dashing British military soldier played by Stewart Granger. It looks like everyone else has the problem with her; she’s not fitting into any box nicely and neatly. She challenges their perceptions. She is harassed and nearly sexually assaulted because of her heritage. She doesn’t trade on her looks in this film and again, she’s a woman unlucky in love. You know what? I find these movies about interracial romance endlessly fascinating – in the many ways they keep couples FROM being together.
Personally, I hate re-makes. So, of course it stands to reason that I love MOGAMBO (’53). (Go figure.) I think it’s cool to find Gable starring as ‘The King’ of the jungle in his second go-round with this story. He’s a man who has to choose between two women. Well, let’s say two types of women. In the original 1932 version, RED DUST, Gable is torn between the lady Astor (Mary Astor) and ‘30’s blonde bombshell Harlow. (See...that last name). By the time 1953 rolls around, John Ford directs this deepest, darkest, technicolor African safari film and Gable’s choices are between one of the 'It' girls of the ‘50's: future princess of Monaco Grace Kelly and the saucy, sassy Ava as Eloise ‘Honeybear’ Kelly. Ava’s a good-time girl with Gable...they got ‘history.’ No strings. She’s sexy, but that’s not all she shows. Ava has a scene with a baby elephant which shows off her comedic timing. And when Ava sees that Gable prefers the prim and proper blonde, we hurt for her. Ford gives us a lovely but sad moment with her on that veranda, when she drops the devil-may-care mask. I love the angry, fiery Ava...fur flying, but the heartbroken Ava tugs at you.
MOGAMBO marks Ava and Gable’s third teaming together, the others being THE HUCKSTERS (’47) and LONE STAR (’52), hence the easy breeeezy chemistry between them.
THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA (’54) is a big-budget Hollywood film where we cover the rise and fall of a small-town dancer/turned actress. As with Lana and Rita, men chased them, but I find more often than not with Ava, she does the choosing. She is the object of desire in THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA, but what these men fail to understand is you can’t control Ava; so whether you’re a millionaire playboy or a powerful movie executive as they are in this movie, she stays with you for as long as you’re not a possessive pain in the neck. She maintains her independence through each relationship. The story unfolds in flashback and we see how Ava’s Maria Vargas winds up where she does. Maria’s story reminds me a little of Ava’s real-life story; plucked from obscurity, thrown in the spotlight, not happy in relationships. It’s dawning on me that Ava’s characters do well when the man is her plaything. But let her fall in love...and it’s her undoing.
Ava and Humphrey Bogart have great chemistry here and it’s one of my favorite Bogart roles. I wish they had done more films together. But I understand the chemistry was on-camera only. Bogie was Team Sinatra in Ava’s and Frank’s turbulent years together. She and Edmond O’Brien (Academy Award-winner for his nervous and sweaty press agent he portrays in this film) appear here together for the second time. She’ll work with him a third time in 1964’s SEVEN DAYS IN MAY.
If you can only see or DVR one film of Ava’s tonight, PANDORA AND THE FLYING DUTCHMAN (‘51) is a MUST-SEE.
“I’d die for you without the least hesitation.”
Ava is at her most ravishing in her entire career in this film. Her beauty is other worldly, the screen drips with her. And who better to try and match her beauty but master cinematographer Jack Cardiff. Ava plays Pandora, a selfish girl who weaponizes her beauty. Boy oh boy, what men do for her. She's like the mythological Siren whom men are compelled by. It’s not that she sends men to their doom; they willingly leap into it. And I’m telling you, Ava works it.
In talking about this movie with my friend Wendy, she explains to me Ava’s appeal and she really helps crystallize for me just what it is about Ava. She says it better than I could:
“She is a woman who lives like a man. Ava is just so much herself in this movie. There’s no pretense. Somehow with director Albert Lewin she is relaxed and confident. And in glorious color.”
In PANDORA AND THE FLYING DUTCHMAN, Ava is headstrong, bored, looking for kicks, does what she wants; not totally uncaring but a bit careless with people; sad she can’t do anything about men falling for her. She feels nothing...until she meets a man onboard a boat who, sight unseen, has been painting her portrait. The magical realism of the film takes off. You have to see Ava hopelessly in love. You have to see this movie.
TCM’s Summer Under the Stars programming is a good way to see an actor in one fell swoop. Perhaps it’ll make you want to explore her other films. See her in EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE (‘49), ON THE BEACH (‘59) or especially her tear it up in NIGHT OF THE IGUANA (’64). But for here and now...spending all day with Ava is not a bad thing.
#Ava Gardner#Summer Under the Stars#TCM#Killers#Barefoot Contessa#Clark Gable#Humphrey Bogart#Pandora#Turner Classic Movies#Theresa Brown
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Your favorite european actresses ? Thanks
Liv Ullmann, Ingrid Bergman, Jeanne Moreau, Giulietta Masina, Greta Garbo, Bibi Andersson, Michèle Morgan, Ingrid Thulin, Danielle Darrieux, Maria Casarès, Marlene Dietrich, Delphine Seyrig, Harriet Andersson, Anouk Aimée, Emanuelle Riva, Françoise Dorléac, Catherine Deneuve, Romy Schneider, Hanna Schygulla, Isabelle Adjani, Anna Magnani, Isabelle Huppert, Silvana Magnano, Ingrid Carven, Bulle Ogier, Vanessa Redgrave, Wendy Hiller, Carmen Maura, Irène Jacob, Margit Carstensen, Monica Vitti, Annie Girardot, Juliette Binoche, Simone Signoret, Bernardette Lafont, Stéphane Audran, Dita Parlo, Alida Valli, Musidora, Asta Nielsen.
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The Murders at Winston Manor
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2LnTi4P
by elegia (starcrawler)
The fourth grade class of South Park Elementary is forced to attend a retreat at the Winston Manor, or "Massive Shithole," as Cartman calls it, in Utah. The intention is for some unwinding and reflection, but what they get is a massive war between schools, a couple of murders, a Mormon boy who can't seem to take his eyes off Wendy, and Private Eye Eric Cartman. This is going to be a real long weekend.
Words: 1244, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English
Fandoms: South Park
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Categories: Multi
Characters: Stan Marsh, Kyle Broflovski, Eric Cartman, Kenny McCormick, Leopold "Butters" Stotch, Wendy Testaburger, Craig Tucker, Tweek Tweak, Clyde Donovan, Token Black, Bebe Stevens, Heidi Turner, Red (South Park), Herbert Garrison, Jimmy Valmer, Timmy Burch, Randy Marsh, Sharon Marsh
Relationships: Stan Marsh/Wendy Testaburger, Craig Tucker/Tweek Tweak, Kyle Broflovski & Stan Marsh, Kyle Broflovski & Eric Cartman, Kyle Broflovski & Kenny McCormick, Stan Marsh & Kenny McCormick, Kyle Broflovski & Eric Cartman & Stan Marsh & Kenny McCormick & Leopold "Butters" Stotch, Bebe Stevens & Wendy Testaburger
Additional Tags: Don't Examine This Too Closely, Randomness, retreat, or something, not gonna be a lot of romance or anything, but I'll try, Eric Cartman Being Eric Cartman, Kyle Is A Jew, lowkey garbo, I'll try to be funny, and as offensive as possible, in real south park fashion, Noir Detective Cartman, mysterion - Freeform
read it on the AO3 at https://ift.tt/2LnTi4P
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OSCARS
Legenda:
Legenda - Winners I have watched
Legenda - Winners I don’t know of
Legenda - Winners I know of
Legenda - Nominees I have watched
Legenda - Nominees I don’t know of
Legenda - Nominees I know of
1927/28
BEST MOVIE
Wings
The Racket
7th Heaven
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Janet Gaynor:
for her role as Diane Angela, The Wife in 7th Heaven and Street Angel Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans
Louise Dresser:
for her role as Mrs. Pleznik in A Ship Comes In
Gloria Swanson:
for her role as Sadie Thompson in Sadie Thompson
1928/29
BEST MOVIE
The Broadway Melody
Alibi
Hollywood Revue
In Old Arizona
The Patriot
= 0
Mary Pickford:
for her role as Norma Besant in Coquette
Ruth Chatterton:
for her role as Jacqueline Floriot in Madame X
Betty Compson:
for her role as Carrie in The Barker
Jeanne Eagels:
for her role as Leslie Crosbie in The Letter
Corinne Griffith:
for her role as Emma Hamilton in The Divine Lady
Bessie Love:
for her role as Hank Mahoney in The Broadway Melody
1929/30
BEST MOVIE
All Quiet on the Western Front
The Big House
Disraeli
The Divorcee
The Love Parade
= 0
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Jerry Bernard Martin in The Divorcee
Nancy Carroll:
for her role as Hallie Hobart in The Devil’s Holiday
Ruth Chatterton:
for her role as Sarah Storm in Sarah and Son
Greta Garbo:
for her role as Anna Christie/Madame Rita Cavallini in Anna Christie Romance
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Lucia Marlett in Their Own Desire
Gloria Swanson:
for her role as Marion Donnell in The Trespasser
1930/31
BEST MOVIE
Cimarron
East Lynne
The Front Page
Skippy
Trader Horn
= 0
Marie Dressler:
for her role as Min Divot in Min and Bill
Marlene Dietrich:
for her role as Mademoiselle Amy Jolly in Morocco
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Sabra Cravat in Cimarron
Ann Harding:
for her role as Linda Seton in Holiday
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Jan Ashe in A Free Soul
1931/32
BEST MOVIE
Grand Hotel
Arrowsmith
Bad Girl
The Champ
Five Star Final
One Hour with You
Shanghai Express
The Smiling Lieutenant
= 0
Helen Hayes:
for her role as Madelon Claudet in The Sin of Madelon Claudet
Marie Dressler:
for her role as Emma Thatcher Smith in Emma
Lynn Fontanne:
for her role as The Actress in The Guardsman
1932/33
BEST MOVIE
Cavalcade
42nd Street
A Farewell to Arms
I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang
Lady for a Day
Little Women
The Private Life of Henry VIII
She Done Him Wrong
Smilin’ Through
State Fair
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Katharine Hepburn:
for her role as Eva Lovelace in Morning Glory
May Robson:
for her role as Apple Annie in Lady for a Day
Diana Wynyard:
for her role as Jane Marryot in Cavalcade
1934
BEST MOVIE
It Happened One Night
The Barretts of Wimpole Street
Cleopatra
Flirtation Walk
The Gay Divorcee
Here Comes the Navy
The House of Rothschild
Imitation of Life
One Night of Life
The Thin Man
Viva Villa!
The White Parade
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Claudette Colbert:
for her role as Ellie Andrews in It Happened One Night
Grace Moore:
for her role as Mary Barrett in One Night of Love
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Elizabeth Barrett in The Barrett of Wimpole Street
Bette Davis:
for her role as Mildred Rogers in Of Human Bondage
1935
BEST MOVIE
Munity on the Bounty
Alice Adams
Broadway Melody of 1936
Captain Blood
David Copperfield
The Informer
The Lives of a Bengal Lancer
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Les Misérables
Naughty Marietta
Rugs of Red Gap
Top Hat
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Bette Davis:
for her role as Joyce Heath in Dangerous
Elisabeth Bergner:
for her role as Gemma Jones in Escape Me Never
Claudette Colbert:
for her role as Jane Everest in Private Words
Katharine Hepburn:
for her role as Alice Adams in Alice Adams
Miriam Hopkins:
for her role as Becky Sharp in Becky Sharp
Merle Oberon:
for her role as Kitty Vane in The Dark Angel
1936
BEST MOVIE
The Great Ziegfeld
Anthony Adverse
Dodsworth
Libeled Lady
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town
Romeo and Juliet
San Francisco
The Story of Louis Pasteur
A Tale of Two Cities
Three Smart Girls
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Luise Rainer:
for her role as Anna Held in The Great Ziegfeld
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Theodora Lynn in Theodora Goes Wild
Gladys George:
for her role as Carrie Snyder in Valiant is the Word for Carrie
Carole Lombard:
for her role as Irene Bullock in My Man Godfey
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Juliet Capulet in Romeo and Juliet
1937
BEST MOVIE
The Life of Emile Zola
The Awful Truth
Captain Courageous
Dead End
The Good Earth
In Old Chicago
Lost Horizon
One Hundred Men and a Girl
Stage Door
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Luise Rainer:
for her role as O-Lan in The Good Earth
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Lucy Warriner in The Awful Truth
Greta Garbo:
for her role as Marguerite Gautier in Camille
Janet Gaynor:
for her role as Esther Victoria Blodgett/Vicki Lester in A Star is Born
Barbara Stanwyck:
for her role as Stella Martin Dallas in Stella Dallas
1938
BEST MOVIE
You Can’t Take It With You
The Adventures of Robin Hood
Alexander’s Ragtime Band
Boys Town
The Citadel
Four Daughters
Grand Illusion
Jezebel
Pygmalion
Test Pilot
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Bette Davis:
for her role as Julie Marsden in Jezebel
Fay Bainter:
for her role as Hannah Parmalee in White Banners
Wendy Hiller:
for her role as Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion
Norma Shearer:
for her role as Marie Antoinette in Marie Antoinette
Margaret Sullavan:
for her role as Patricia “Pat” Hollmann in Three Comrades
1939
BEST MOVIE
Gone With The Wind
Dark Victory
Goodbye, Mr. Chips
Love Affair
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Ninotchka
Of Mice and Men
Stagecoach
The Wizard of Oz
Wuthering Heights
= 0
BEST ACTRESS
Vivien Leigh:
for her role as Scarlett O’Hara in Gone with the Wind
Bette Davis:
for her role as Judith Traherne in Dark Victory
Irene Dunne:
for her role as Terry McKay in Love Affair
Greta Garbo:
for her role as Nina Yakushnova “Ninotchka” Ivanoff” in Ninotchka
Greer Garson:
for her role as Katherine Bridges in Goodbye, Mr. Chips
1940
BEST MOVIE
Rebecca
All This, and Heaven Too
Foreign Correspondent
The Grapes of Wrath
The Great Dictator
Kitty Foyle
The Letter
The Long Voyage Home
Our Town
The Philadelphia Story
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Ginger Rogers:
for her role as Kitty Foyle in Kitty Foyle
Bette Davis:
for her role as Leslie Crosbie in The Letter
Joan Fontaine:
for her role as The Second Mrs. de Winter in Rebecca
Katharine Hepburn:
for her role as Tracy Lord in The Philadelphia Story
Martha Scott:
for her role as Emily Webb in Our Town
1941
BEST MOVIE
How Green Was My Valley
Blossoms in the Dust
Citizen Kane
Here Comes Mr. Jordan
Hold Back the Dawn
The Little Foxes
The Maltese Falcon
One Foot in Heaven
Sargeant York
Suspicion
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Joan Fontaine:
for her role as Lina McLaidlaw Aysgarth in Suspicion
Bette Davis:
for her role as Regina Giddens, The Little Foxes
Olivia de Havilland:
Emmy Brown, Hold Back the Dawn
Greer Garson, Blossoms in the Dust
Barbara Stanwyck, Ball of Fire
1942
BEST MOVIE
Mrs. Miniver
The Invaders
Kings Row
The Magnificent Ambersons
The Pied Piper
The Pride of the Yankees
Random Harvest
The Talk of the Town
Wake Island
Yankee Doodle Dandy
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Greer Garson, Mrs. Miniver
Bette Davis, Now, Voyager
Katharine Hepburn, Woman of the Year
Rosalind Russel, My Sister Eileen
Teresa Wright, The Pride of the Yankees
1943
BEST MOVIE
Casablanca
For Whom the Bell Tolls
Heaven Can Wait
The Human Comedy
In Which We Serve
Madame Curie
The More the Merrier
The Ox-Bow Incident
The Song of Bernadette
Watch on the Rhine
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Jennifer Jones, The Song of Bernadette
Jean Arthur, The More the Merrier
Ingrid Bergman, For Whom the Bell Tolls
Joan Fontaine, The Constant Nymph
Greer Garson, Madame Curie
1944
BEST MOVIE
Going My Way
Double Indemnity
Gaslight
Since You Went Away
Wilson
= 0
BEST ACTRESS:
Ingrid Bergman, Gaslight
Claudette Colbert, Since You Went Away
1945
BEST MOVIE
The Lost Weekend
Anchors Aweigh
The Bells of St. Mary’s
Mildred Pierce
Spellbound
= 0
1946
BEST MOVIE
The Best Years of Our Lives
Henry V
= 0
1947
BEST MOVIE
Gentleman’s Agreement
The Bishop’s Wife
Crossfire
Great Expectations
Miracle on 34th Street
= 0
1948
BEST MOVIE
Hamlet
Johnny Belinda
The Red Shoes
The Snake Pit
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
= 0
1949
BEST MOVIE
All the King’s Men
Battleground
The Heiress
A Letter to Three Wives
Twelve O’Clock High
= 0
1950
BEST MOVIE
All About Eve
Born Yesterday
Father of the Bride
King Solomon’s Mines
Sunset Boulevard
= 0
1951
BEST MOVIE
An American In Paris
Decision Before Dawn
A Place in the Sun
Quo Vadis
A Streetcar Named Desire
= 0
1952
BEST MOVIE
The Greatest Show on Earth
High Noon
Ivanhoe
Moulin Rouge
The Quiet Man
= 0
1953
BEST MOVIE
From Here to Eternity
Julius Caesar
The Robe
Roman Holiday
Shane
= 1
1954
BEST MOVIE
On The Waterfront
The Caine Mutiny
The Country Girl
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
Three Coins in the Fountain
= 0
1955
BEST MOVIE
Marty
Love is a Many-Splendored Thing
Mister Roberts
Picnic
The Rose Tattoo
= 0
1956
BEST MOVIE
Around the World in 80 Days
Friendly Persuasion
Giant
The King and I
The Ten Commandments
= 0
1957
BEST MOVIE
The Bridge On The River Kwai
12 Angry Men
Peyton Place
Sayonara
Witness for the Prosecution
= 0
1958
BEST MOVIE
Gigi
Auntie Mame
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
The Defiant Ones
Separate Tables
= 0
1959
BEST MOVIE
Ben-Hur
Anatomy of a Murder
The Diary of Anne Frank
The Nun’s Story
Room at the Top
= 0
1960
BEST MOVIE
The Apartment
The Alamo
Elmer Gantry
Sons and Lovers
The Sundowners
= 0
1961
BEST MOVIE
West Side Story
Fanny
The Guns of Navarone
The Hustler
Judgment at Nuremberg
= 1
1962
BEST MOVIE
Lawrence of Arabia
The Longest Day
The Music Man
Mutiny on the Bounty
To Kill a Mockingbird
= 0
1963
BEST MOVIE
Tom Jones
America America
Cleopatra
How the West Was Won
Lilies of the Field
= 0
1964
BEST MOVIE
My Fair Lady
Becket
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
Mary Poppins
Zorba the Greek
= 1
1965
BEST MOVIE
The Sound of Music
Darling
Doctor Zhivago
Ship of Fools
A Thousand Clowns
= 1
1966
BEST MOVIE
A Man for All Seasons
Alfie
The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming
The Sand Pebbles
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf
= 0
1967
BEST MOVIE
In the Heat of the Night
Bonnie and Clyde
Doctor Dolittle
The Graduate
Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner
= 0
1968
Oliver!
Funny Girl
The Lion in Winter
Rachel, Rachel
Romeo and Juliet
= 1
1969
BEST MOVIE
Midnight Cowboy
Anne of the Thousand Days
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
Hello, Dolly!
Z
= 0
1970
BEST MOVIE
Patton
Airport
Five Easy Pieces
Love Story
M*A*S*H
= 0
1971
BEST MOVIE
The French Connection
A Clockwork Orange
Fiddler on the Roof
The Last Picture
Nicholas and Alexandra
= 0
1972
BEST MOVIE
The Godfather
Cabaret
Deliverance
The Emigrants
Sounder
= 0
1973
BEST MOVIE
The Sting
American Graffitti
Cries and Whispers
The Exorcist
A Touch of Class
= 0
1974
BEST MOVIE
The Godfather Part II
Chinatown
The Conversation
Lenny
The Towering Inferno
= 0
1975
BEST MOVIE
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest
Barry Lyndon
Dog Day Afternoon
Jaws
Nashville
= 0
1976
BEST MOVIE
Rocky
All the President’s Men
Bound for Glory
Network
Taxi Driver
= 0
1977
BEST MOVIE
Annie Hall
The Goodbye Girl
Julia
Star Wars
The Turning Point
= 0
1978
BEST MOVIE
The Deer Hunter
Coming Home
Heaven Can Wait
Midnight Express
An Unmarried Woman
= 0
1979
BEST MOVIE
Kraver vs. Kramer
All That Jazz
Apocalypse Now
Breaking Away
Norma Rae
= 1
1980
BEST MOVIE
Ordinary People
Coal Miner’s Daughter
The Elephant Man
Raging Bull
Tess
= 0
1981
BEST MOVIE
Chariots of Fire
Atlantic City
On Golden Pond
Raiders of the Lost Ark
Reds
= 0
1982
BEST MOVIE
Ghandi
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
Missing
Tootsie
The Verdict
= 1
1983
BEST MOVIE
Terms of Endearment
The Big Chill
The Dresser
The Right Stuff
Tender Mercies
= 0
1984
BEST MOVIE
Amadeus
The Killing Fields
A Passage to India
Places in the Heart
A Soldier’s Story
= 0
1985
BEST MOVIE
Out of Africa
The Color Purple
Kiss of the Spider Woman
Prizzi’s Honor
Witness
= 0
1986
BEST MOVIE
Platoon
Children of a Lesser God
Hannah and Her Sisters
The Mission
A Room with a View
= 0
1987
BEST MOVIE
The Last Emperor
Broadcast News
Fatal Attraction
Hope and Glory
Moonstruck
= 2
1988
BEST MOVIE
Rain Man
The Accidental Tourist
Dangerous Liaisons
Mississipi Burning
Working Girl
= 0
1989
BEST MOVIE
Driving Miss Daisy
Born on the Fourth of July
Dead Poets Society
Field of Dreams
My Left Foot
= 1
1990
BEST MOVIE
Dances with Wolves
Awakenings
Ghost
The Godfather III
Goodfellas
= 1
1991
BEST MOVIE
The Silence of the Lambs
Beauty and the Beast
Bugsy
JFK
The Prince of Tides
= 1
1992
BEST MOVIE
Unforgiven
The Crying Game
A Few Good Men
Howards End
Scent of a Woman
= 0
1993
BEST MOVIE
Schindler’s List
The Fugitive
In the Name of the Father
The Piano
The Remains of the Day
= 1
1994
BEST MOVIE
Forrest Gump
Four Weddings and a Funeral
Pulp Fiction
Quiz Show
The Shawshank Redemption
= 3
1995
BEST MOVIE
Braveheart
Apollo 13
Babe
The Postman (Il Postino)
Sense and Sensibility
= 4
1996
BEST MOVIE
The English Patient
Fargo
Jerry McGuire
Secrets & Lies
Shine
= 0
1997
BEST MOVIE
Titanic
As Good as it Gets
The Full Monty
Good Will Hunting
L.A. Confidential
= 3
1998
BEST MOVIE
Shakespeare in Love
Elizabeth
Life is Beautiful
Saving Private Ryan
The Thin Red Line
= 3
1999
BEST MOVIE
American Beauty
The Cider House Rules
The Green Mile
The Insider
The Sixth Sense
= 1
2000
BEST MOVIE
Gladiator
Chocolat
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Erin Brokovich
Traffic
= 3
2001
BEST MOVIE
A Beautiful Mind
Gosfrod Park
In the Bedroom
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
Moulin Rouge!
= 1
2002
BEST MOVIE
Chicago
Gangs of New York
The Hours
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
The Pianist
= 1
2003
BEST MOVIE
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
Lost in Translation
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
Mystic River
Seabiscuit
= 0
2004
BEST MOVIE
Million Dollar Baby
The Aviator
Finding Neverland
Ray
Sideways
= 1
2005
BEST MOVIE
Crash
Brokeback Mountain
Capote
Good Night, and Good Luck
Munich
= 0
2006
BEST MOVIE
The Departed
Babel
Letters from Iwo Jima
Little Miss Sunshine
The Queen
= 2
2007
BEST MOVIE
No Country for Old Men
Atonement
Juno
Michael Clayton
There Will Be Blood
= 1
2008
BEST MOVIE
Slumdog Millionaire
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Frost/Nixon
Milk
The Reader
= 1
2009
BEST MOVIE
The Hurt Locker
Avatar
The Blind Side
District 9
An Education
Inglorious Basterds
Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Saphire
A Serious Man
Up
Up in the Air
= 4
2010
BEST MOVIE
The King’s Speech
127 Hours
Black Swan
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids Are All Right
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter’s Bone
= 5
2011
BEST MOVIE
The Artist
The Descendants
Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
The Help
Hugo
Midnight in Paris
Moneyball
The Tree of Life
War Horse
= 3
2012
BEST MOVIE
Argo
Amour
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Django Unchained
Les Miserábles
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty
= 4
2013
BEST MOVIE
12 Years a Slave
American Hustle
Captain Philips
Dallas Buyers Club
Gravity
Her
Nebraska
Philomena
The Wolf of Wall Street
= 4
2014
BEST MOVIE
Birdman
American Sniper
Boyhood
The Grand Budapest Hotel
The Imitation Game
Selma
The Theory of Everything
Whiplash
= 2
2015
BEST MOVIE
Spotlight
The Big Short
Bridge of Spies
Brooklyn
Mad Max: Fury Road
The Martian
The Revenant
Room
= 3
BEST ACTRESS:
Brie Larson, Room
Cate Blanchett, Carol
Jennifer Lawrence, Joy
Charlotte Rampling, 45 Years
Saoirse, Brooklyn
2016
BEST MOIVE
Moonlight
La La Land
Arrival
Fences
Hacksaw Ridge
Hell or High Water
Hidden Figures
Lion
Manchester by the Sea
= 5
BEST ACTRESS:
Emma Stone, La La Land
Isabelle Huppert, Elle
Ruth Negga, Loving
Natalie Portman, Jackie
Meryl Streep, Florence Foster Jenkins
2017
BEST MOVIE
The Shape of Water
Lady Bird
Call Me by Your Name
Get Out
Darkest Hour
Dunkirk
Phantom Thread
The Post
Three Billboards Outside Ebbig, Missouri
= 4
BEST ACTRESS:
Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Sally Hawkins, The Shape of Water
Margot Robbie, I, Tonya
Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird
Meryl Streep, The Post
TOTAL = 71/
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